Thursday 29 December 2011

Welcome to our fellow TLLP participants

I have just linked our blog to the TLLP e-learning site as our first artifact.  Welcome to our first viewers.  We are going to begin our classroom implementation stage right after Christmas and will have much more content then.

We have received our professional reading materials and will have an update of these titles and our reviews of the books after our next meeting in January.

Please check back soon.

Liana, Daniella, Joe and Marc

Thursday 1 December 2011

Math Activities

After teaching the Essential Math class for many years, I decided to incorporate a variety of teaching strategies and activities that I felt would benefit my Grade 10 Applied Math Class. Having a larger number of students in the class as opposed to the small class size and Educational Assistant support in the essential class, I knew the activities that were being introduced would be challenging. My goal was to review the unit of Rates and Ratios through a variety of hands on activities. Some examples include: Comic Strip Grid Art, Wooden Dinosaur Model Building, Play doe Recipe, and a Treasure Map Creation. While completing the assignments, I will be evaluating the overall effectiveness of the activity, interest level of the students, and connection to the curriculum.

Marc

Tuesday 22 November 2011

Session #2

It seems as though the talking and the planning are coming to an end, and the 'doing' is beginning. I was a bit relieved that we were actually able to produce something tangible on Thursday and to me that means that we are ready to implement some of our ideas. Personally, once the Learning Centres are up and running I will have a better idea of where I am headed. Our packages and manipulatives are looking good and I think my students will enjoy them. I also worry about the idea of a locally developed class working in a somewhat independent centre. They seem to really stuggle with anything that is self-directed. Perhaps this is something to keep in mind when I prepare the instructions - they should be clear, simple and easy to understand. Next step - final touches on manipulatives and lesson plans. Hopefully this can be in place for the week of Dec.12th.

Wednesday 16 November 2011

What's next??
We will once again meet tomorrow to continue to develop and explore the TTLP. By utilizing a variety of learning strategies, we hope to reach students with greater success. For example, implementing strategies such as Choice Boards and Group Centers may increase the overall interest and effort of the learners. My goal is to establish a Unit in Math that will engage students through a variety of learning strategies and activities.

How do we measure our success?
Students will be participating in a pre-survey before the unit of study and post-survey at the conclusion of the Unit. We hope with the data we can come to a conclusion on the success of the TTLP.

Here is a Link to the Pre-survey
https://docs.google.com/a/wecdsb.on.ca/spreadsheet/viewform?hl=en_US&formkey=dFNPZHZNRjJzYkZrMHNzOTJrdUdoTkE6MQ#gid=0

Reinforcing Differentiated Instruction

Thus far we've explored numerous DI strategies at all levels of assessment (anectodal, formative, and summative). Ultimately, this exploration will lead to the most effective approaches in reaching the middle-learner. As discussed in our first session, the characteristics of the middle-learner vary from student to student. Thus, it is necessary to provide multiple learning strategies throughout a unit of study. Currently the goal is two-fold, in that we not only want to raise the level of evaluation for our middle-learners, but also increase their engagment to learn. In my opinion the engagement to learn is more important to secure continued success throughout a given course, and thus will be the focus that I will stress throughout our TLLP sessions.

J. Castagna

Sunday 13 November 2011

Our next session is coming up...

I just wanted to quickly post our goals for our next meeting on Thursday, Nov 17 in the morning.

Purchase all material needed.
Make charts to be laminated at CEC.
Set up a budget.
Solidify our lesson ideas to be posted on the blog and google site.

I am excited to get the project underway in our classrooms.

Thursday 13 October 2011

Our first official session

We had our first release day last Friday, October 7.  Seldom have I enjoyed a professional development activity so much as I did Friday's session.

Professional Learning Resources

We chose professional learning books about subject specific DI, PLC's, general DI and student achievement and agreed to create a library of resources for our own use and also for use by our fellow staff members.  When they arrive, we will each review a few of the titles and blog about their usefulness. I am excited to see what new ideas we can find in the new DI library.

Common DI structures and strategies

We chose our common strategies and aligned them with the different elements of a DI lesson plan.

As an anecdotal assessment in the MINDS ON section of the lesson plan cluster, we agreed to do a cubing activity.

As a formative assessment in the ACTION section of the of the lesson plan cluster, we agreed to use Learning Centres and RAFTS.

As the summative assessment in the CONSOLIDATION section of the lesson plan cluster, we agreed to use a Choice Board.

Daniella and I will apply the DI activities in our Grade 9 Locally Developed and Grade 9 Applied English classes respectively during our Romeo and Juliet unit.

I am really looking forward to the creation of Learning Centres.  We are going to label each centre with both the Multiple Intelligences and the VARK inventory identifiers.  We plan to have the students Make a Mask, Watch video clips and compare the interpretations, do a Dramatic Reading and podcast it and do a Scrapbook Portfolio including some journal writing in role.  We will post all of these lessons and document files when they are completed.

Pre and Post Survey

We also did a short Google Survey to be administered before and after the unit to see how the students' attitudes and interest change, if at all, after the DI lessons.  We worked on the questions together and then Marc got the survey set up for us.

Planning for the Activities
We made a list of materials we would need and also some posters/charts for the lessons. 

Next steps
Our next step will be to take a Period 3 off near the end on November 17. We all have 4th Prep so we will gather the materials and complete all the posters/charts at our WECDSB Teacher Center.

Our goal is to implement the over a week period from Nov. 21 - Nov 25.  We will begin with the survey on November 21 in the computer lab and end with the Post Activity survey on November 28.

Overall impressions

So far, I am finding this a very encouraging and empowering experience.  We have a group of people who are like-minded and curious.  We have control over our own methods and our own implementation.  This is how P.D. should be.  I am excited to see the plans in action.  We so seldom get time to reflect on our practices, discuss new ideas and fine tune our own approaches to our subject areas.  I always feel like I don't have enough time but on Friday, we were able to discuss our own practices and brainstorm new ways to reach our students.  It was really great.

A return to teachers as intellectuals

A colleague of mine presented an article in a M.Ed. class I am taking and the following passage struck me.  I feel like this project is respectful of teachers as intellectuals and professionals.


The ghost of curriculum past that I’d most like to animate is the ghost of teachers as
intellectuals. Intellectuals are those who have “a highly developed ability to think,
reason and understand especially in combination with wide knowledge” (Soukhanov,
1999) Creative intellectuals are those with “the ability to use the imagination to
develop new and original ideas or things” (Soukhanov, 1999). Wise intellectuals are
those with the ability to make sound, sensible and reliable judgments based on
knowledge and experience. Practical intellectuals are those who can put these
abilities to practical use. Education systems that animate these ghosts will not be
staffed by docile or compliant teachers – teachers who think thin. Rather, they will be
staffed by teachers who are creative, wise and practical intellectuals. And being thus
they will be able to produce students with the abilities to think, judge and imagine
and to put these abilities to practical use.

Kenway, J. (August 01, 2008). The Ghosts of the School Curriculum: Past, Present and Future. Australian Educational Researcher, 35, 2, 1-13.

The Beginning of the Road - Oct/11 First Meeting

Our first release day was a very productive and helpful session. In addition to ordering and discussing book choices, we created 2 meaningful student surveys to help us plan and edit our assessments for future use. This will also be helpful to know students better and eventually present our findings to other teacher groups. The focus for the next month or so will be to create and implement the Choice Boards, Learning Centres, RAFTs, and Cubing activities. Personally, I am anxious to use the Learning Centres with my GLE/ENG1L0 class and their Romeo and Juliet unit. Depending on the success of this method it may something that can be easily adapted and used in other classes and with other topics. In the end, this TLLP will be most valuable to our peers if we can provide them with real techniques that can be adapted to suit their individual disciplines. I think one of the main criticisms about PD is that it is irrelevant and only good in theory. I guess my personal goals here are to learn something that will make me a better teacher and teach something that will make someone else a better teacher. That is after all - the point!

Friday 13 May 2011

The Beginning.

We are at the Teacher Learning and Leadership Program Conference and this post is the official beginning of our project.

We are forming a PLC to explore the use of DI to improve the engagement and involvement of the middle learner at Holy Names Catholic High School in Windsor, Ontario.

It is exciting and overwhelming but as Tolkien has said, "Little by little, one travels far".